Description
Acknowledgements.- Foreword (Frank Duerden).- Preface.- Part I: Qaujisaqtaq: Doing Research Together.- Chapter 1. What They Didn't Teach You in University (Justin S. Milton, A. Anaviapik, I. Koonoo, M. Milton, C. Sudlovenick and S. Elverum).- Chapter 2. Atauttikkut: Combining Home and Research (Enooyaq Sudlovenick).- Part II: Human First; Researcher Second.- Chapter 3. Be Prepared (to be Wrong) (Tristan Pearce).- Chapter 4. Relationship Building as a Research Method (Kristin Emanuelsen).- Chapter 5. I Found Something That I Wasn't Looking For (Rowan Schindler).- Part III: Working Together for a Common Cause.- Chapter 6. Let Your Humanity Guide You (Elizabeth Worden).- Chapter 7. The Rhythm of Community Research (Devin Waugh).- Chapter 8. The Complexities of a Community-Governed Research Project (Angus Naylor).- Part IV: Things that We Wish Someone Had Told Us.- Chapter 9. It's More than Just Research (Jessica Smart).- Chapter 10. Balancing Research Expectations with Community Realities (David Fawcett).- Chapter 11. Nothing Could have Prepared Me for This (Sarah Flisikowski).- Part V: Working Across Cultures.- Chapter 12. How Culture Shapes Research (Miguel van der Velden).- Chapter 13. Lessons that Transcend Culture and Place (Eric Lede).- Part VI: Afterword.- Chapter 14. Shut Up and Listen (Ena Maktar and Shelly Elverum).
Author: Tristan Pearce
Publisher: Springer
Published: 08/28/2022
Pages: 121
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.44lbs
Size: 9.21h x 6.14w x 0.29d
ISBN13: 9783030784850
ISBN10: 3030784851
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Human Geography
- Social Science | Anthropology | General
- Science | Earth Sciences | Geography
About the Author
Dr. Tristan Pearce is an Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair in the cumulative impacts of environmental change at the University of Northern British Columbia. His research takes place at the interface between science and policy, and focuses on understanding what makes communities vulnerable or resilient to environmental changes, using this understanding to identify and evaluate pathways for adaptation. He leads a diversity of initiatives in this area, and has long-standing relationships with communities in the Canadian Arctic, Australia, and Pacific Islands Region.
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